12–1DNA

In 1928, British scientist Fredrick Griffith was trying to learn how certain types of bacteria caused pneumonia.

He isolated two different strains of pneumonia bacteria from mice and grew them in his lab.

Griffith made two observations:

(1)______

(2) ______

Griffith's Experiments

Griffith set up four individual experiments.

Experiment 1: Mice were injected with the ______strain of bacteria. The mice developed pneumonia and died.

Experiment 2: Mice were injected with the ______strain of bacteria. These mice didn’t get sick.

Experiment 3: Griffith heated the ______bacteria. He then injected the ______

into the mice. The mice survived.

Experiment 4: Griffith mixed his heat-killed, disease-causing bacteria with live, harmless bacteria and injected the mixture into the mice. The mice developed ______and died.

Griffith concluded that the ______bacteria passed their disease-causing ______to the harmless strain.

Griffith called this process ______because one strain of bacteria (the harmless strain) had ______permanently into ______(the disease-causing strain).

Griffith ______that a ______must contain information that could change ______bacteria into disease-causing ones.

Avery and DNA

Oswald Avery repeated Griffith’s work to determine which ______was most important for______.

·  Avery and his colleagues made an ______from the heat-killed bacteria that they treated with______.

·  The enzymes destroyed______, ______, ______, and other molecules, including the ______RNA.

·  ______still occurred.

Avery and other scientists ______the experiment using ______that would break down DNA.

·  When ______was destroyed, ______did not occur. Therefore, they concluded that______was the transforming factor.

The Hershey-Chase Experiment

Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase studied viruses—______smaller than a cell that can ______living organisms.

·  A virus that infects bacteria is known as a______.

·  Bacteriophages are composed of a ______or ______core and a ______coat.

·  When a bacteriophage enters a______, the virus attaches to the surface of the cell and ______its ______information into it.

·  The viral ______produce many new______, which eventually destroy the bacterium.

·  When the cell splits open, ______of new viruses burst out.

If Hershey and Chase could determine which part of the______entered an infected cell, they would learn whether ______were made of ______or DNA.

They grew viruses in cultures containing radioactive isotopes of ______(32P) and ______(35S).

·  If 35S was found in the bacteria, it would mean that the viruses’ ______had been ______into the bacteria.

·  If 32P was found in the bacteria, then it was the ______that had been injected.

Nearly all the radioactivity in the bacteria was from ______(32P). Hershey and Chase concluded that the genetic material of the bacteriophage was DNA, not protein.

The Components and Structure of DNA

DNA is made up of______.

A ______is a monomer of ______made up of a five-carbon sugar called deoxyribose, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.

There are four kinds of bases in in DNA:

•  ______

•  ______

•  ______

•  ______

The backbone of a DNA chain is formed by ______and ______groups of each nucleotide.

·  The______can be joined together in any order.

Erwin Chargaff discovered that: Called Chargaff's Rules

•  The percentages of ______[G] and ______[C] bases are almost ______in any sample of DNA.

•  The percentages of ______[A] and ______[T] bases are almost ______in any sample of DNA.

X-Ray Evidence

Rosalind Franklin used X-ray diffraction to get information about the structure of DNA. She aimed an X-ray beam at concentrated DNA samples and recorded the scattering pattern of the X-rays on film.

The Double Helix

Using clues from Franklin’s pattern, James Watson and Francis Crick built a ______that explained how ______carried ______and could be copied.

Watson and Crick's model of DNA was a double helix, in which two strands were wound around each other.

Watson and Crick discovered that ______can form only between certain base pairs—adenine and______, and guanine and______.

This principle is called______.

12–2Chromosomes and DNA Replication

DNA and Chromosomes

·  In prokaryotic cells, DNA is located in the______.

·  Most prokaryotes have a ______DNA molecule containing nearly all of the cell’s ______information.

Many eukaryotes have ______times the amount of DNA as______.

Eukaryotic DNA is located in the cell ______inside chromosomes.

The number of ______varies widely from one ______to the next.

·  Eukaryotic chromosomes contain ______wrapped around ______called histones. The strands of ______are tightly ______and supercoiled to form ______.

DNA Replication

1.  Each strand of the DNA double helix has all the information needed to reconstruct the other half by the mechanism of______.

2.  In most prokaryotes, DNA replication begins at a ______and continues in ______directions.

3.  In eukaryotic chromosomes, DNA replication occurs at ______of places. Replication proceeds in ______directions until each chromosome is ______copied.

4.  The sites where ______and replication occur are called ______forks.

Duplicating DNA

·  Before a cell divides, it ______its DNA in a process called ______.

·  Replication ensures that each resulting cell will have a ______set of DNA.

·  DNA ______is carried out by enzymes that “______” a molecule of DNA.

·  ______bonds between base pairs are ______and the two strands of DNA______.

·  The principal enzyme involved in DNA replication is DNA______.

o  DNA ______joins individual ______to produce a DNA molecule and then “______” each new DNA strand.

12-3

RNA and Protein Synthesis

·  ______are coded DNA instructions that control the ______of proteins.

·  Genetic messages can be decoded by copying part of the nucleotide sequence from ______into______.

RNA contains coded information for making______.

The Structure of RNA

·  RNA consists of a long chain of nucleotides.

·  Each ______is made up of a 5-carbon sugar, a______, and a ______base.

o  There are three main differences between RNA and DNA:

•  ______.

•  ______.

•  ______.

There are three main types of RNA:

•  ______

•  ______

•  ______

•  ______RNA (mRNA) carries copies of instructions for ______amino acids into proteins.

Ribosomes are made up of proteins and ______RNA (rRNA).

During protein construction, ______RNA (tRNA) transfers each amino acid to the ribosome.

Transcription

RNA molecules are produced by copying part of a nucleotide sequence of DNA into a complementary sequence in RNA. This process is called______.

Transcription requires the enzyme RNA______.

·  During transcription, RNA ______binds to ______and ______the DNA strands.

·  RNA ______then uses one strand of DNA as a template from which nucleotides are assembled into a strand of RNA.

RNA polymerase binds only to regions of DNA known as promoters.

Promoters are signals in DNA that indicate to the enzyme where to bind to make RNA.

RNA Editing

The DNA of eukaryotic genes contains sequences of nucleotides, called introns, that are not involved in coding for proteins.

The DNA sequences that code for proteins are called exons.

When RNA molecules are formed, introns and exons are copied from DNA.

The introns are cut out of RNA molecules.

The exons are then spliced together to form mRNA.

The Genetic Code

The genetic code is the “language” of mRNA instructions.

The code is written using four “letters” (the bases: A, U, C, and G).

A codon consists of three consecutive nucleotides on mRNA that specify a particular amino acid.

Each codon specifies a particular amino acid that is to be placed on the polypeptide chain.

Some amino acids can be specified by more than one codon.

There is one codon AUG that can either specify the amino acid methionine or serve as a “start” codon for protein synthesis.

There are three “stop” codons that do not code for any amino acid. These “stop” codons signify the end of a polypeptide.

Translation

Translation is the decoding of an mRNA message into a polypeptide chain (protein).

Translation takes place on ribosomes.

During translation, the cell uses information from messenger RNA to produce proteins.

Messenger RNA is transcribed in the nucleus, and then enters the cytoplasm where it attaches to a ribosome.

Translation begins when an mRNA molecule attaches to a ribosome.

As each codon of the mRNA molecule moves through the ribosome, the proper amino acid is brought into the ribosome by tRNA.

In the ribosome, the amino acid is transferred to the growing polypeptide chain.

Each tRNA molecule carries only one kind of amino acid.

In addition to an amino acid, each tRNA molecule has three unpaired bases.

These bases, called the anticodon, are complementary to one mRNA codon.

The ribosome binds new tRNA molecules and amino acids as it moves along the mRNA.

The process continues until the ribosome reaches a stop codon.

The Roles of RNA and DNA

The cell uses the DNA “master plan” to prepare RNA “blueprints.” The DNA stays in the nucleus.

The RNA molecules go to the protein building sites in the cytoplasm—the ribosomes.

Genes and Proteins

Genes contain instructions for assembling proteins.

Many proteins are enzymes, which catalyze and regulate chemical reactions.

Proteins are each specifically designed to build or operate a component of a living cell.

The sequence of bases in DNA is used as a template for mRNA.

The codons of mRNA specify the sequence of amino acids in a protein.